Dr. Gertrude B. Kelly (1862-1934) Surgeon, Irish Republican, Suffragette, Writer, Social Activist and Philanthropist
May I, as a woman, an Irishwoman and physician, spokeswoman of hundred,
thousands of my sisters at home and abroad ask our leaders what it is
they propose to Ireland to do - commit suicide? Admitting for the moment
that this is "a most righteous war" not - "a war of iron and coal" - a
war between titans for commercial supremacy - why should little Ireland
have to do what the United State, Switzerland, etc., do not. Is Home
Rule to be secured for the cattle and sheep when the young men of
Ireland are slaughtered, the old men and old women left sonless, the
young women obliged to emigrate to bring up sons for men of other
climes.
Kelly
responding to
John
Redmond's endorsement of WWI and pledge to supply Irishmen to augment
the forces of the British
Empire
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Early Years
Gertrude Brice Kelly was one of twelve children born to Jeremiah and
Kate Kelly (nee Forrest) near Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Waterford on February
10, 1862, Both of Gertrude's parents were teachers who, according to
some accounts, were supporters of the Irish Republican Brotherhood
(IRB), a movement dedicated to overthrowing British rule in Ireland.
Possible because of Jeremiah support for or involvement in the IRB, he
left Ireland for the United States in 1868 taking up residence in
Hoboken, New Jersey. His family joined him there in 1873. After
settling in Hoboken, Jeremiah secured a teaching position in the public
school system where Gertrude and her siblings received their education.
Eventually, Jeremiah became superintendent of Hoboken's school system.
There is scant information available regarding how many of Gertrude's
siblings survived their childhood; how many were born in Ireland or if
any were born in the United States.
The only sibling, other than Gertrude, who attracted attention in their
adult life was her older brother,
John Forrest Kelly. After obtaining a PhD from Stevens Institute of
Technology in Hoboken, at the age of 22, he became an assistant to
Thomas Edison in the Menlo Park laboratory. During his lifetime he held
over seventy electrical related patents and helped pioneer high-voltage
electricity generating and transmission systems. In addition to his
professional endeavors, he was a prolific writer, a lifelong advocate
for Irish freedom and a generous contributor to that cause. After his
death in 1922
Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington said of
him, “Ireland has lost in him one of her best, staunchest, and ablest
champions”; his “work for Ireland will never be forgotten.”
After graduating high school Gertrude studied at the Women's Medical
College of the New York Infirmary for Women and Children from where she
graduated with a M.D. degree in 1884. The Women's Medical College of the
New York was founded by English-born
Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, the first
female physician in the United States.
Although Gertrude campaigned for many deserving causes during her
lifetime, her primary focus was on the downtrodden and poor working
women and their families. To that end she set up a medical clinic in
Chelsea to provide for their basis medical needs. For patients too ill
to visit the clinic she went to their homes and, oftentimes, instead of
charging for her services gave them money for medicine or food.
In addition to her work at the clinic, Gertrude was a renowned surgeon
and a member of the surgical staff at the New York Infirmary for Women
and Children, the training institution from where she received her
medical training. During her long and illustrious medical career, she
authored and co-authored numerous papers on surgical procedures and
other medical and healthcare related issues.
An Advocate for the Poor, Downtrodden and Marginalized
Throughout her life Gertrude held strong anti-establishment views on
many of the accepted norms of that time. Her attitude towards
established order was greatly influenced by the oppression she witnessed
during her childhood in Ireland, her parents’ Irish nationalistic
activism both in Ireland and in the United States and her own keen
intellect, sense of worth and fairness. Her views on many issues were
unorthodox; for instance, she believed that capitalism was the root
cause of poverty and social injustice, that individual autonomy and
responsibility were the building blocks of social order and cohesion,
that gender, race, beliefs, or individual attributes had no impact on
the equal and inalienable rights of the individual, and that in
Gertrude' own words: “the woman’s cause is man’s—they rise or
sink/together—dwarfed or god-like-bond or free,"
During her student years Gertrude kept abreast of unfolding events in
Ireland from articles in both the Irish World published in New York and
the Boston Pilot published in Boston. Both of these newspapers
reported on the overall state of affairs in Ireland including the
failure of the Irish Land Act of 1870 to improve the lot of tenant
farmers, the formation of the Irish Land League in 1879 the subsequent
Land Wars, the No-Rent movement, and
the indiscriminate evictions of Irish tenant farmers from their land by
agents of absentee English landlords whose claims to the land came from
conquest and legal privilege.
Gertrude did not remain silent in light of the misery and suffering
endured by the oppressed tenant farmers in Ireland or the poor and
exploited tenement dwellers in New York. In articles published in the
individualist periodical Liberty and the Irish World she
gave expression to her indignation and abhorrence at the lack of
fairness empathy or sense of humanity inherent in the attitude of the
ruling elite towards the poor.
Benjamin Tucker, editor of the Liberty stated that Gertrude by
her articles in Liberty: "has placed herself at a single
bound among the finest writers of this or any other country".
In 1879,
John Devoy of Clan na Gael in the
United States forged a new initiative dubbed the “New Departure,” with
Michael Davitt of the Irish
Republican Brotherhood and Charles Stewart Parnell of the Home Rule
League to create a united front that would include a combination of
physical force, agrarian agitation and constitutional nationalism to
alleviate the suffering of the Irish tenant farmer and wrest a modicum
of Home Rule from England. Parnell and Davitt were also members of the
Irish National Land League. The short-lived initiative produced little
other than the escalation of the Land Wars of the 1880s and the founding
of the Irish National Land League.
In support of that initiative
Fanny Parnell founded the Ladies
Land League in America. Branches were established in Hoboken, Jersey
City, Newark, and Patterson. Gertrude was an active member of one of the
branches, probably the Hoboken branch where the family settled after
arriving from Ireland. She was an enthusiastic and effective fundraiser
and a vocal proponent of the No-Rent Manifesto published by the National
Land League in 1881.
In 1901, John Redmond who assumed leadership of the reunited Irish
Parliamentary Party (IPP), established the United Irish League of
America to raise funds for the IPP and promote its Home Rule agenda in
the United States. As a product of the Catholic gentry Redmond was an
imperialist who embraced class stratification and gender stereotyping,
archaic mores emblematic of the British social order.
The Irish Home Rule legislation Redmond promoted would keep Ireland
within the confines of the British Empire and require that it be
governed in accordance with British law and customs. Despite the fact
that Gertrude was an ardent proponent of unbridled Irish independence,
she, nonetheless, supported Redmond's campaign in the absence of other
options. In so doing she reasoned that Home Rule could be used as a
platform to launch a nonviolent, anti-British, grassroots campaign that
would lead to a sovereign Irish Republic.
Embracing Irish Freedom
In October of 1914 Gertrude issued a call to the women of Irish blood to
join the first chapter of Cumann na mBan in the United States. Hundreds
of women responded and shortly afterwards at a meeting at the
Hotel McAlpin, Gertrude,
Mary Colum and
Sidney Gifford, a newcomer from
Ireland, outlined the aims of the organization. Simply put the chapter
would follow the lead of Cumann na mBan in Ireland which was to raise
funds and garner support for the Irish Volunteers formed in 1913 in
response to the formation of the Ulster Volunteers the previous year.
The declared aim of the Volunteers was "to secure and maintain the
rights and liberties common to the whole people of Ireland". As
President of the organization Gertrude helped set-up other branches and
arranged for speakers from Ireland to address its members, conduct
lecture tours and help in fundraising efforts.
Towards the end of 1914 Gertrude led the opposition to Redmond's
endorsement of WWI and his pledge to supply Irishmen to augment the
forces of the British Empire. In rebuking Redmond's pledge Gertrude
issued the following statement.
May I, as a woman, an Irishwoman and physician, spokeswoman of hundred,
thousands of my sisters at home and abroad ask our leaders what it is
they propose to Ireland to do - commit suicide? Admitting for the
moment that this is "a most righteous war" not - "a war of iron and
coal" - a war between titans for commercial supremacy - why should
little Ireland have to do what the United State, Switzerland, etc., do
not. Is Home Rule to be secured for the cattle and sheep when the young
men of Ireland are slaughtered, the old men and old women left sonless,
the young women obliged to emigrate to bring up sons for men of other
climes.
After the Easter Rising, Cumann na mBan fundraising efforts were
redirected to the support of the families of imprisoned Volunteers that
numbered in the thousands. Gertrude and other Irish women activists
including
Margaret Moore, a Land League
veteran and labor leader
Lenora O'Reilly led that fundraising
campaign.
In 1917, Gertrude, Peter and Helen Golden, Leonora O'Reilly, Hanna
Sheehy-Skeffington, Padraic and
Mary Colum,
Liam Mellows and other leading
Irish-American activists founded the Irish Progressive League (IPP). At
that time, any individual or organization who criticized British policy
in Ireland was considered pro-German by the Wilson administration and
subject to scrutiny and possible prosecution. The IPP viewed Clan na
Gael, whose members were on the government watch list, too compromised
to function as the voice of Irish freedom in America. They believed they
could better handle that role.
Members of the IPP including Gertrude were not intimidated by the
government pro-British bias and went about their business lobbying the
government in Washington D.C. to recognize the Irish Republic declared a
sovereign nation by the first Dáıl Éıreann in 1919.
In 1920 Gertrude was among a group of women who organized the American
Women Pickets (AWP) for the enforcement of President Wilson's "War
Aims" i.e., “self-determination
for small nations" and "the war to end all wars". To that end
the AWP journeyed to Washington D.C. where they blockaded the British
Embassy in order to draw attention to Britain's denial of
self-determination to Ireland, a clear violation of Wilson's rationale
for entering the war in support of the British and its empire.
In December of 1920, the AWP and the Irish Progressive League organized
a strike at the Chelsea Pier in Manhattan to protest the arrests of
Irish Archbishop Daniel Mannix, an outspoken foe of British rule in
Ireland, and Terence MacSwiney the Lord Mayor of Cork. Gertrude, Leonora
O'Reilly, Hannah Sheehy-Skeffington, and Eileen Curran of the Celtic
Players organized a group of women who dressed in white with green capes
and carried signs that read: “There Can Be No Peace While British
Militarism Rules the World."
The strike which, lasted three and a half weeks, was directed at British
ships docked in New York. Striking workers included Irish longshoremen,
Italian coal passers, African American longshoremen and workers on a
docked British passenger liner. According to a local newspaper report it
was "the first purely political strike of workingmen in the history
of the United States". Before it ended it had spread to Brooklyn,
New Jersey, and Boston.
In
December of 1921 when the Anglo-Irish Treaty (Treaty) was signed Irish
Americans including Gertrude, who had worked so hard and so long for a
sovereign Irish Republic, were, to say the least, sorely disappointed.
The British-drafted Treaty provided for the partition of Ireland and the
establishment of a Free State government for the 26 southern counties.
The Free State government was required to swear allegiance to the
English Monarch and his/her heirs.
At
a meeting chaired by
Diarmuid Lynch in New York on Dec.
17 1920, Gertrude stated the following regarding the terms of the
Treaty:
“The thing itself is absolutely unthinkable. We have always been
slaves, but unwilling slaves. Now we are subscribing to our slavery. I
cannot believe that the Irish people will do this. The whole thing is a
fake from start to finish.”
Summed up I would say that after 750 years we have given England moral
standing in the world when she has none:
it’s a tremendous defeat.”
The lopsided treaty caused a split in the Irish Republican Army that
resulted in a bloody war that lasted from June of 1922 thru May of
1923. Free State forces, consisting mostly of ex-British soldiers,
equipped with an unlimited supply of military equipment left behind by
departing British army, prevailed.
The atrocities and summary executions carried out the Free State during
the war was a despairing development and major concern for Irish
Americans particularly women who feared that the Free State was
considering executing some of the women prisoners that numbered in the
hundreds. In an attempt to head off such a development and stop the
wholesale execution of male prisoners, members of the AWP including
Gertrude sent a telegram to President Warren G Harding imploring him to
intervene to stop the slaughter.
Legacy and Death
Throughout her lifetime in the United States Gertrude was a ubiquitous
presence in Irish American circles including those associated with
culture, politics, suffrage, labor, and philanthropy. She was a towering
figure in organizations that fostered health and education for the
underprivileged irrespective of race or origin. In the first quarter of
the 20th century, she was on the 'must meet' list of every Irish
political and literary figure who came to the United States. Despite all
of that her contributions have been ignored or forgotten by the Irish
American community that she so faithfully served for over 50 years.
Gertrude passed away on February 16, 1934. In 1936 Mayor Fiorello H.
LaGuardia named a
playground in her honor. The Dr.
Gertrude B. Kelly playground is located in the Chelsea district, west of
9th Avenue between 16th and 17th Streets.
Contributed by Tomás Ó Coısdealbha
cemetery
NAME: Hoboken Cemetery
ADDRESS: 5500 Tonnelle Ave, North Bergen, New Jersey 07047 |